Conference on the Competitive Advantage of Emerging Market Multinationals
On March 25-27, 2011, Northeastern University co-sponsored, along with Cambridge University and the University of Sao Paolo, a conference on the competitive advantage of Emerging Market Multinationals. The event was held at the Judge Business School, University of Cambridge, UK. The conference focused on questions related to globalization and emerging markets. Traditionally, much of the focus on the globalization of business has focused on Europe, the USA and Japan, but in 2009 roughly one quarter of all global Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) emanated from emerging markets. This conference hoped to shed light
on how emerging market multinationals (EMNE) are able to compete with more established multinationals by focusing on the shift from country to firm-specific advantages. Panelists and discussants examined the impact of innovation, the use of M&As to access new resources and the ways in which EMNE’s have developed new ways to configure their international value chains in the context of Brazil, Russia, India and China.
Event organizers were: Professor Peter Williamson of Judge Business School, Cambridge University; Ravi Ramamurti of Northeastern University; Professor Afonso Fleury, University of Sao Paulo; and Maria Tereza Fleury, FGV, Brazil. Northeastern University faculty members who participated in the conference included Prof Ravi Sarathy, Sheila Puffer, and Alvaro Cuervo-Cazurra.
Workshop on Managing the Use of Favors in a Global Economy
On October 14 and 15, 2010 the Center for Emerging Markets and the College of Business Administration co-sponsored a workshop on managing the use of favors in a global economy. The event was organized and hosted by Professor Sheila Puffer, Walsh Research Professor and Cherry Family Senior Fellow of International Business and Professor Daniel McCarthy, McKim-D’Amore Distinguished Professor of Global Management and Innovation. The workshop brought together leading scholars from a wide range of fields and different universities “whose research is relevant to the development of a new research on the nature and use of favors in a global economy, with emphasis on the emerging markets.”
CEM Co-Sponsors International Workshop on Anti-Corruption Training Materials, May 22-24, 2011
Under the leadership of Professor Nikos Passas of the School of Criminology and Criminal Justice, this international workshop aims to bring together eminent experts in the field of anti-corruption, representing a wide range of emerging economies and prominent international institutions and organizations, such as the United Nations.. To jump start the expert group’s deliberations, a baseline syllabus and a database containing relevant bibliographies and support materials with module suggestions for different audiences was prepared by the School of Criminology and Criminal Justice, in collaboration with the Law School, the Center for Emerging Markets and the College of Business Administration of Northeastern University. Faculty from the three NU colleges supported the deliberations. The objective of the meeting was to discuss both the substance and the structure of the draft academic program, and to ensure its adaptability and applicability in countries worldwide. The consultation process initiated by this first expert group meeting in Boston endeavored to produce academic material designed for students, and will be offered as an educational tool contributing to the prevention of corruption in emerging markets around the world.